Ok, lot of angles in there. I basically want to know what you think about these ideas on the nature of free will, what determines our destinies, and whether reality is all good. Thanks — Gregory
any good parent — tim wood
Yes. I agree that we have freedom of choice, but only in a very limited range. Sometimes we have to choose the lesser of evils, not from a range of desires. Elsewhere, I have expounded on the notion of Freewill Within Determinism, but here I'll just refer to an inherent paradox in the Christian notion of Freewill Despite Predestination. This is my reply, and later commentary on a Quora question about that article of faith. :chin:I think free will works in this way: we always follow our strongest desire, but we are free in our choices. — Gregory
My problem with the Christian position on hell is that God creates humanity knowing the majority of them will end up in hell. He might surely have reason to allow it (so the saved can have greater spiritual benefits), but I thought creation reflects his nature. It seems to me that his nature is defective if he can't create a world where everyone goes to heaven and has all the spiritual benefits they could imagine. I'm working on this question from an atheistic perspective — Gregory
I think free will works in this way: we always follow our strongest desire, but we are free in our choices. You are free to choose one way or another when a genuine choice is put before you, but it's infallibly certain which one you will choose if you are looking at it from the outside like Laplace's demon. The reason is that there is no reason to choose the weaker impulse! But I think we are free none the less to choose the lesser one and although we never will choose it, we will always consider it¹. This might seem like a paradox, or it might seem perfectly clear. It probably depends where someone is in their journey. I was wondering if I should post about this because I am not sure where I am in my journey,
or any of you.
The question of the nature of reality is involved in this topic as well. If some people never reach their full potential while others do, it is through their fault². HOWEVER, the universe is set up such that many will fail their destiny³. So can we conclude that reality is not good? Yet it is still the fault of the people who fail that they trip themselves up. — Gregory
Out of interest, I offer the view that this is a bit too "easy" of a theory, and there's reason to suspect it can't quite work this way (this is quite nit picky, but I'm actually particularly interested in the weeds). In particular, when we choose something, we choose options, not desires; the desires we have sort of rank the options, and somehow choices come out. If you view this like voting, then Arrow's Impossibility Theorem comes into play... this suggests that at least when more than 2 options are presented, then there's simply some sort of messy conflict resolution between the options, and AIT kind of proves that it has to be messy.we always follow our strongest desire, but we are free in our choices. — Gregory
Options being considered in a choice are considerations, not "realities". (I have no qualms how you map this to "free will" one way or the other, but having a single outcome does not entail a choice was not made... all it entails is that if a choice was made, that outcome was what was chosen).assuming there are only two possible choices is completely ignoring Laplace's demon? — Key
I am not sure what Philosophy of Mind means, but I think this is the appropriate subsection.
I think free will works in this way: we always follow our strongest desire, but we are free in our choices. You are free to choose one way or another when a genuine choice is put before you, but it's infallibly certain which one you will choose if you are looking at it from the outside like Laplace's demon. The reason is that there is no reason to choose the weaker impulse! But I think we are free none the less to choose the lesser one and although we never will choose it, we will always consider it. This might seem
like a paradox, or it might seem perfectly clear. It probably depends where someone is in their
journey. I was wondering if I should post about this because I am not sure where I am in my journey,
or any of you.
The question of the nature of reality is involved in this topic as well. If some people never reach their full potential while others do, it is through their fault. HOWEVER, the universe is set up such that many will fail their destiny. So can we conclude that reality is not good? Yet it is still the fault of the people who fail that they trip themselves up.
Imagine you are God and you want you set up creation such that 3 fourths of everyone ends up in hell. You can tell yourself "so what, it was their fault at the end of the day" or you can say "I should have set it up so everyone goes to heaven because this is obviously the kind thing to do".
Ok, lot of angles in there. I basically want to know what you think about these ideas on the nature of free will, what determines our destinies, and whether reality is all good. Thanks — Gregory
Options being considered in a choice are considerations, not "realities". (I have no qualms how you map this to "free will" one way or the other, but having a single outcome does not entail a choice was not made... all it entails is that if a choice was made, that outcome was what was chosen). — InPitzotl
Okay.If you look rather briefly at the entirety of my post and the references I made to the original post... you may note the thick, goopy sarcasm. The question mark might also help you. — Key
"Free ... to choose the lesser one" admits to a potential interpretation that the lesser is part of the consideration and that the actor is the cause of the choice. The particular phrasing of this sentence supports this interpretation.But I think we are free none the less to choose the lesser one and although we never will choose it, we will always consider it¹. — Gregory
Laplace's demon would indicate that the greater happens. This is consistent with the fact that there was a consideration of the lesser and that the actor was the cause of the choice; that is, all three of the following can be true:If Laplace's demon indicates the possibility for a good number of realities, the likelihood that only two of those are ever available to be chosen from isn't too hot. — Key
Assumptions are elicited by assertions, yes?Sorry; let me rephrase this more simply... you're making an unwarranted assumption. — InPitzotl
I beg you to find any understanding of Laplace's demon that would remotely agree with you. Laplace's demon is a concept of causal determinism.Laplace's demon specifies that selecting the greater option would happen — InPitzotl
This presumes that there are hazy assertions. Under a charitable interpretation, you misread the assertions.The one and only assertion I made in my original post was: "there are quite a few... hazy assertions in the preceding deluge." — Key
I beg you to find any understanding of Laplace's demon that would remotely agree with you. Laplace's demon is a concept of causal determinism. — Key
Okay, so Laplace's demon is a concept of causal determinism. But under causal determinism, there is only one possible sequence of events. If there's only one possible sequence of events, there is only one reality. So what are these limitless realities you're talking about? I only count one of them.In my second post (replying to you) I stated that the probability of an actor existing in a universe of potentially limitless realities and being bound to a maximum of two conscious choices is less than a snowman's chance in hell. — Key
Because you quoted Gregory, and Gregory's model is that we always choose the "strongest" desire. This implies a well ordering of desires that specifies the choice, such that there's a well defined maximum. I've already critiqued this using Arrow's Impossibility Theorem, but it works just fine for two choices. But aside from there technically not being a clean concept of "strongest desire", the number really doesn't matter, so long as it's more than one.Here's a few questions you should consider answering: why does your actor only possess a greater and lesser choice? — Key
I've already critiqued this using Arrow's Impossibility Theorem — InPitzotl
It's a fine point in the mechanics you describe. Suppose we're mulling over three options; A, B, and C. In terms of "effort" they may rank B, A, C; in terms of "fun" they may rank C, B, A; and so on. Under compatibilism there must be some sort of actual process resolving these desires into a selection. Whatever that process is, you can view it analogously to the desires being voters, and the options being what's voted on. The analogy dissolves when you consider that the math doesn't change just because these desires aren't literally voters. All I'm saying is that "strongest" desire doesn't necessarily fit the mechanics... it's simply some sort of messier resolution.I don't think that theorem has much, if anything, to do with compatibilism. — Gregory
Well if there are deterministic rules, then for all practical purposes our soul is physical and made of meat... but said meat would still cause things.Things seemed already planned for me, but I seem most certainly free at the same time. Is the pre-established harmony choices of my own soul that come to the surface for me to see? — Gregory
That seems to presume that your ego is limited to what you're conscious of. I'm not quite sure I buy that; it violates specific observations involving self reflection. To me, it appears that anything meaningful that I call "me" is more than what I'm aware of... it's just that the stuff I am aware of happens to be that part that I'm aware of. The "me" is bigger, consisting of all of the stuff I mean, all of the stuff I know, all of the stuff I know how to do, and so on, whether I'm currently thinking about such things or not (and furthermore, the factual knowledge about my "me" seems to be a constructed model of myself). Furthermore, I don't think I can be conscious of a thing before there's a thing to be conscious of, so unless things loop from consciousness to mulling and back (or something to that effect), they generally start unconsciously.I tend to be skeptical about the subconscious or unconscious or pre-conscious making chooses for my ego — Gregory
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